Leather Shot Bags & Accouterments for the French & Indian War.

Welcome to my Blog! My name is Darrel Lang and I specialize in the Replication of Leather shot bags & Accouterments made in the colonies by the harness and saddle maker of the18th century. All items are hand sewn using waxed linen thread, dyed, then treated with neatsfoot oil & bee’s wax. The leather used is of veg. tanned cow hide 2-3 or 4-5 oz. weight. Other materials used are pig skin, period correct linens for the 18th century and iron or brass buckles. Please take a look at what I have to offer. Thank you!

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May 31, 2013

"250 Years Ago Today", Pontiac's Plan comes together

Before other British outposts had learned about Pontiac's siege at Detroit,
Native Americans under Pontiac's plan captured five small forts in a series of attacks between May
16 and June 2.

The first to be taken was Fort
Sandusky, a small blockhouse on the shore of Lake Erie. It had been built in
1761 by order of General Amherst, despite the objections of local Wyandots, who
in 1762 warned the commander that they would soon burn it down.On May 16, 1763,
a group of Wyandots gained entry under the pretense of holding a council, the
same stratagem that had failed in Detroit nine days earlier. They seized the
commander and killed the other 15 soldiers, as well as British traders at the
fort.These
were among the first of about 100 traders who were killed in the early stages
of the war.The dead were ritually scalped and the fort—as
the Wyandots had warned a year earlier—was burned to the ground.

Fort St. Joseph was captured on May 25, 1763, by the same method as at
Sandusky. Potawatomis seized the commander and killed most of the 15-man
garrison outright.

Fort Miami was the third fort to
fall. On May 27, 1763, the commander was lured out of the fort by his Native
mistress and shot dead by Miami Native Americans. The nine-man garrison
surrendered after the fort was surrounded.

In the Illinois Country, Weas, Kickapoos, and Mascoutens took Fort Ouiatenon,
on June 1, 1763. They lured soldiers outside for a council, and took the 20-man
garrison captive without bloodshed. The Native Americans around Fort Ouiatenon
had good relations with the British garrison, but emissaries from Pontiac at
Detroit had convinced them to strike. The Natives apologized to the commander
for taking the fort, saying that "they were obliged to do it by the other
Nations."In contrast with other forts, the Natives did
not kill the British captives at Ouiatenon.

The fifth fort to fall, Fort Michilimackinac, was the largest fort taken by
surprise. On June 2, 1763, local Ojibwas staged a game of stickball with
visiting Sauks. The soldiers watched the game, as they had done on previous
occasions. The ball was hit through the open gate of the fort; the teams rushed
in and were given weapons which Native women had smuggled into the fort. The Natives killed about 15 of the 35-man garrison in the struggle; later they
killed five more in ritual torture.

Three forts in the Ohio Country were taken in a second wave of attacks in
mid-June. Iroquois Senecas took Fort Venango around June 16, 1763. They killed
the entire 12-man garrison outright, keeping the commander alive to write down
the grievances of the Senecas. After that, they ritually burned him at the
stake. Possibly the same Seneca warriors attacked Fort Le Boeuf on June 18, but
most of the 12-man garrison escaped to Fort Pitt.
On June 19, 1763, about 250 Ottawa, Ojibwa, Wyandot, and Seneca warriors
surrounded Fort Presque Isle , the eighth and final fort to fall. After holding
out for two days, the garrison of about 30 to 60 men surrendered, on the
condition that they could return to Fort Pitt.The warriors killed most of the soldiers after
they came out of the fort.